

Here are the most popular features of the week at Current:
- Felix James Miller, “REVIEW: Manhood, Patriarchy, and Father Time“
- Christopher J. Lane, “REVIEW: Slow Productivity“
- Sean McGever, “PREVIEW: Ownership: The Evangelical Legacy of Slavery“
- Christopher Shannon, “It’s Hard to Be a Saint in the City“
- John Haas, “No Laughing Matter?“
Here are the most popular posts of the last week at The Way of Improvement Leads Home blog:
- Cornerstone University fires tenured professors and terminates all humanities and arts programs
- Cornerstone University responds to our story on faculty cuts and the termination of humanities and arts programs
- Is Mervis Gobbles a Real Person?
- What is going on at Cornerstone University?
- Ishmael Reed to Cornel West: “Are you sure you want to help install a dictatorship?”
- This may be the best thing I have read on Trump
- The Presbyterian Church in America canceled David French. Today he responds.
- Cornerstone University votes no-confidence in president the day before inauguration
- Former Regent University professors have some stories to tell about Cornerstone University’s new president
- What happens when the “greatest” moment in your denomination’s history was orchestrated by a sexual abuser of boys?
Here are the most popular posts of the last week at The Arena blog:
- This summer: low in cost, high in fun (Dixie Dillon Green)
- Who’s at fault? They-a culpa, mea culpa (Marvin Olasky)
- The life you save may be your own (Jon D. Schaff)
- Interview: Joshua Kinlaw on the classics and classical education (Nadya Williams)
- Interview: Miles Smith’s Religion and Republic: Christian America from the Founding to the Civil War (Daniel K. Williams)
I don’t seem to receive e-mails from Current these days. It is a prompt to get my to drop by. Did I miss something?
There seems to be some movement to respond toward presenting messages regarding Christian and Politics. The ones I have noted are is the “after party” I learned about it on the Good Faith Podcast. Plus essays, books seeking to draw upon what Jesus taught regarding this. I would like to see some comments on these efforts to move Christians more toward the role as demonstrated by Jesus and also the apostles. How do these current effort compare with similar times throughout history. And some more historiacl background on the beliefs that make up Christian Nationalism. I know this isn’t the first time.
Thank you for developing Current and providing interesting information from a wide variety of people and opinions. Susan Peterson